Gifting to Employees
The tax treatment of these gifts from an employer standpoint, depends upon a range of factors including:
■ To whom the gifts are provided (e.g. employees or clients?)
■ Whether the gifts constitute entertainment
■ The dollar value of the gifts, and
■ The frequency with which they are provided.
Use the following steps as a guide:
1. Does the gift constitute entertainment?
■ If yes...go to 2
■ If no...go to 3
(gifts that constitute entertainment include: tickets to the movies/plays/theatre, restaurant meals, holiday airline tickets, admission tickets to amusement parks etc.)
(gifts that do not constitute entertainment include: Christmas hampers, bottles of alcohol, gift vouchers, perfume, flowers, pen sets)
2. Does it cost less than $300 (GST-inclusive) and is provided infrequently?
■ If yes...no FBT, no deduction, no GST credit
■ If no...FBT applies, is deductible and can claim any GST
3. Does it cost less than $300 (GST-inclusive) and is provided infrequently?
■ If yes...no FBT, deduction can be claimed as can any GST credits
■ If no...FBT applies, deduction can be claimed a scan any GST credits
All told, from a tax standpoint it’s best to buy employees and their associates non-entertainment gifts that cost less than $300. That way, no FBT is payable yet a deduction and GST credits can be claimed. Alternatively, you can put the tax burden back on the employee and pay them a cash bonus, in which case the amount will be assessable to the employee, and deductible to the employer.